553 research outputs found
A Deterministic and Nondestructively-Verifiable Photon Number Source
We present a deterministic approach based on continuous measurement and
real-time quantum feedback control to prepare arbitrary photon number states of
a cavity mode. The procedure passively monitors the number state actually
achieved in each feedback stabilized measurement trajectory, thus providing a
nondestructively verifiable photon source. The feasibility of a possible cavity
QED implementation in the many-atom good-cavity coupling regime is analyzed
Considering the Consequences of Child Welfare Service Decisions
The following commentary serves as a response to the article, “That Wall is Around My Heart,” underscoring the importance of decision making in child welfare services. The commentary supports the need for child welfare systems to carefully consider the long-term consequences of various service intervention strategies. Child welfare systems must attend to both the internal external elements of safety, giving special attention to the emotional trauma of child maltreatment and the trauma resulting from removal and placement in alternative care. The commentary supports the need for child welfare systems to provide effective interventions that prevent and respond to child abuse and neglect, as well as break the cyclical nature of child maltreatment, helping ensure the safety of children and families for future generations
Collective processes of an ensemble of spin-1/2 particles
When the dynamics of a spin ensemble are expressible solely in terms of
symmetric processes and collective spin operators, the symmetric collective
states of the ensemble are preserved. These many-body states, which are
invariant under particle relabeling, can be efficiently simulated since they
span a subspace whose dimension is linear in the number of spins. However, many
open system dynamics break this symmetry, most notably when ensemble members
undergo identical, but local, decoherence. In this paper, we extend the
definition of symmetric collective states of an ensemble of spin-1/2 particles
in order to efficiently describe these more general collective processes. The
corresponding collective states span a subspace which grows quadratically with
the number of spins. We also derive explicit formulae for expressing arbitrary
identical, local decoherence in terms of these states.Comment: 12 pages, see 0805.2910 for simulations using these method
Efficient feedback controllers for continuous-time quantum error correction
We present an efficient approach to continuous-time quantum error correction
that extends the low-dimensional quantum filtering methodology developed by van
Handel and Mabuchi [quant-ph/0511221 (2005)] to include error recovery
operations in the form of real-time quantum feedback. We expect this paradigm
to be useful for systems in which error recovery operations cannot be applied
instantaneously. While we could not find an exact low-dimensional filter that
combined both continuous syndrome measurement and a feedback Hamiltonian
appropriate for error recovery, we developed an approximate reduced-dimensional
model to do so. Simulations of the five-qubit code subjected to the symmetric
depolarizing channel suggests that error correction based on our approximate
filter performs essentially identically to correction based on an exact quantum
dynamical model
Tensor polarizability and dispersive quantum measurement of multilevel atoms
Optimally extracting information from measurements performed on a physical
system requires an accurate model of the measurement interaction. Continuously
probing the collective spin of an Alkali atom cloud via its interaction with an
off-resonant optical probe is an important example of such a measurement where
realistic modeling at the quantum level is possible using standard techniques
from atomic physics. Typically, however, tutorial descriptions of this
technique have neglected the multilevel structure of realistic atoms for the
sake of simplification. In this paper we account for the full multilevel
structure of Alkali atoms and derive the irreducible form of the polarizability
Hamiltonian describing a typical dispersive quantum measurement. For a specific
set of parameters, we then show that semiclassical predictions of the theory
are consistent with our experimental observations of polarization scattering by
a polarized cloud of laser-cooled Cesium atoms. We also derive the
signal-to-noise ratio under a single measurement trial and use this to predict
the rate of spin-squeezing with multilevel Alkali atoms for arbitrary detuning
of the probe beam.Comment: Significant corrections to theory and data. Full quality figures and
other information available from http://minty.caltech.edu/papers.ph
Single shot parameter estimation via continuous quantum measurement
We present filtering equations for single shot parameter estimation using
continuous quantum measurement. By embedding parameter estimation in the
standard quantum filtering formalism, we derive the optimal Bayesian filter for
cases when the parameter takes on a finite range of values. Leveraging recent
convergence results [van Handel, arXiv:0709.2216 (2008)], we give a condition
which determines the asymptotic convergence of the estimator. For cases when
the parameter is continuous valued, we develop quantum particle filters as a
practical computational method for quantum parameter estimation.Comment: 9 pages, 5 image
Distinguishing between optical coherent states with imperfect detection
Several proposed techniques for distinguishing between optical coherent
states are analyzed under a physically realistic model of photodetection.
Quantum error probabilities are derived for the Kennedy receiver, the Dolinar
receiver and the unitary rotation scheme proposed by Sasaki and Hirota for
sub-unity detector efficiency. Monte carlo simulations are performed to assess
the effects of detector dark counts, dead time, signal processing bandwidth and
phase noise in the communication channel. The feedback strategy employed by the
Dolinar receiver is found to achieve the Helstrom bound for sub-unity detection
efficiency and to provide robustness to these other detector imperfections
making it more attractive for laboratory implementation than previously
believed
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